Logic
Versus Custom, Seven Versus Eight?
Reflections on the End of Pesach and
Reconsideration of Personal Practice
Reflections on the End of Pesach and
Reconsideration of Personal Practice
Rabbi
Michael L. Feshbach
Temple Shalom, Chevy Chase, MD
Temple Shalom, Chevy Chase, MD
I
felt a tad sad as we marked the end of Passover this year, this past Monday
night. It wasn’t that I missed the
matzah – on the contrary, I found the observance harder this year than on some
previous occasions, even with a relaxed view of kitniyot (we followed the Sephardic practice, this year, of eating
rice and beans and corn – as even the ultra-Orthodox Ashkenazi authorities who
still insist on this restriction admit that it is “nonsense” based on a
mistake.)
No,
I felt a bit sad because it felt too isolated, too lonely to end Passover after
seven days.
Seven
days is the length of the holiday as ordained in the Torah. It says it, in plain English, right there in
the original! (See, e.g., Exodus
12:15). Seven days is the length of the
holiday in Israel to this day, but Jews in the Diaspora had, several thousand
years ago, added an “extra” day, to cover any irregularities or ambiguities in calculating
the lunar calendar, and so the practice outside of Israel was to observe
Passover for eight days. At the outset
of the Reform movement in the 19th century, arguing – with full
logic – that the calendar had long since been calibrated with mathematic
precision and no longer depended on witnesses showing up in the courtyard of
the Temple reporting that they had seen the sliver of the new moon, our liberal
branch of Judaism declared the “extra” day of all the holidays defunct, and
returned Passover to its Biblically envisioned seven days. (Why many Reform Jews now observe a Second
Day of Rosh Hashanah is a complicated question for another time.)
And
so here I am, happily breaking bread and hauling boxes, last Monday night. Seven is enough. We’re done.
Passover is over.
So
why did we feel so all alone?
I
have written elsewhere (“Put Down That Bread,” http://www.faces-in-the-mirror.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2012-09-27T13:22:00-07:00&max-results=20&start=2&by-date=false)
of the importance, the centrality of the observance of Passover, and the
prohibition on the eating of bread (and other leavened products) as a core
marker of Jewish identity. I don’t want
to repeat that argument now. But I
continue to notice the trend… away from this observance.
When
I was growing up avoiding leaven during Passover was a quite widespread
observance – even among marginally affiliated or tentatively connected
Jews. But it just… doesn’t seem to be
that way anymore. At least not in the
circles in which I travel.
Ending
Passover last Monday night? Three Reform colleagues I spoke with Tuesday
said they were waiting until Tuesday night.
And on Monday night there
was no “buzz,” no added activity, no excitement in the bakeries or pizza places
in our part of town. Because, I think –
liberal Jews are no longer keeping seven days.
They are keeping either eight days – or one/none. This practice… people are perfectly willing
to eat matzah. They just are not keen on
giving anything up. They are fine with
the positive commandment. But no one is going
to tell them not to do something. And the
hard “work” of Passover comes down to preparing a seder meal – not to an
all-out, full-blown, otherwise-totally-worthwhile Spring Cleaning. (Note that I did not grow up in a kosher home
– but we still got rid of the bread, put the cereal in the basement, put the
not-often-consumed-anyway bottles of beer somewhere else.)
So here is the
question: am I missing something, or going to the wrong part of town, or are we
a vanishing-breed, we seven-days-of-Pesach Jews? Where do you stand on this, and does it
matter to you at all? Did you end Pesach
last Monday night? Last Tuesday
night? Or sometime after the first seder?
Personally, I believe
that eight days of Passover is excessive, illogical, and inaccurate. But I know that custom and community often
trump logic… and I miss that sense of being in this boat together. I would actually consider switching our
practice, extending the holiday against my own rational instincts… to return to
a sense of breaking (or, more literally, baking) bread together.
Is this the most
pressing question in the world? Gun
control and capital punishment are on the front pages, the spectre of nuclear
weapons extends from the Middle East to East Asia. Economic issues press upon us.
But yes, I do believe
Jewish solidarity is an important issue – and practices which surround and
protect and promote Jewish identity are worth weighing in our lives. So, no apologies from this corner, for
raising what may seem a small issue to some.
There is a word for that feeling of opening oneself up to obligation, to
being pulled, or called, to a commitment that comes from outside the self. That word is “holy.” And that feeling of connection to my community,
that feeling that was missing this year… that is something to which I am wholly
committed.
1 comment:
We observe 8 - no logic to it and on me personally it has almost no impact because I can't eat gluten anyway. The hard part for me is to do the positive commandment - there's forbidden gluten in all the 5 grains of the commandment. I've made passable oat cakes but somehow this also is a lonely goal.
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